scholarly journals Back Cover: Single‐Molecule 3D Orientation Imaging Reveals Nanoscale Compositional Heterogeneity in Lipid Membranes (Angew. Chem. Int. Ed. 40/2020)

2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (40) ◽  
pp. 17760-17760
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew
2020 ◽  
Vol 59 (40) ◽  
pp. 17572-17579
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew

2020 ◽  
Vol 132 (40) ◽  
pp. 17725-17732
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew

2020 ◽  
Vol 132 (40) ◽  
pp. 17912-17912
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew

AbstractIn soft matter, thermal energy causes molecules to continuously translate and rotate, even in crowded environments, impacting the spatial organization and function of most molecular assemblies, such as lipid membranes. Directly measuring the orientation and spatial organization of large collections (>3000 molecules/μm2) of single molecules with nanoscale resolution remains elusive. We present SMOLM, single-molecule orientation localization microscopy, to directly measure the orientation spectra (3D orientation plus “wobble”) of lipophilic probes transiently bound to lipid membranes, revealing that Nile red’s (NR) orientation spectra are extremely sensitive to membrane chemical composition. SMOLM images resolve nanodomains and enzyme-induced compositional heterogeneity within membranes, where NR within liquid-ordered vs. liquid-disordered domains shows a ~4° difference in polar angle and a ~0.3π sr difference in wobble angle. As a new type of imaging spectroscopy, SMOLM exposes the organizational and functional dynamics of lipid-lipid, lipid-protein, and lipid-dye interactions with single-molecule, nanoscale resolution.


2020 ◽  
Vol 118 (3) ◽  
pp. 21a
Author(s):  
Jin Lu ◽  
Hesam Mazidi ◽  
Tianben Ding ◽  
Oumeng Zhang ◽  
Matthew D. Lew

2021 ◽  
Vol 118 (48) ◽  
pp. e2113202118
Author(s):  
Rafael L. Schoch ◽  
Frank L. H. Brown ◽  
Gilad Haran

Lipid membranes are complex quasi–two-dimensional fluids, whose importance in biology and unique physical/materials properties have made them a major target for biophysical research. Recent single-molecule tracking experiments in membranes have caused some controversy, calling the venerable Saffman–Delbrück model into question and suggesting that, perhaps, current understanding of membrane hydrodynamics is imperfect. However, single-molecule tracking is not well suited to resolving the details of hydrodynamic flows; observations involving correlations between multiple molecules are superior for this purpose. Here dual-color molecular tracking with submillisecond time resolution and submicron spatial resolution is employed to reveal correlations in the Brownian motion of pairs of fluorescently labeled lipids in membranes. These correlations extend hundreds of nanometers in freely floating bilayers (black lipid membranes) but are severely suppressed in supported lipid bilayers. The measurements are consistent with hydrodynamic predictions based on an extended Saffman–Delbrück theory that explicitly accounts for the two-leaflet bilayer structure of lipid membranes.


2005 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mairi E. Sandison ◽  
Daniele Malleo ◽  
David Holmes ◽  
Richard Berry ◽  
Hywel Morgan

2010 ◽  
Vol 43 (7-8) ◽  
pp. 586-596
Author(s):  
Derek J. Bailey ◽  
Jared T. Kindt ◽  
M. Madison Taylor ◽  
Ashley R. Paulson ◽  
Brynna H. Jones ◽  
...  

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